Lego is celebrating Nasa’s pioneering women with a new 231-piece set
The minifigures include a computer scientist, a physicist and two astronauts.
A group of Nasa’s barrier-breaking women has been immortalised in Lego form.
The construction toy maker has announced, starting next month, it is selling 231-piece sets titled Women of Nasa featuring four pioneering women: Nancy Grace Roman, Margaret Hamilton, Sally Ride and Mae Jemison.
Roman was one of the leading astronomers behind the Hubble telescope, while computer scientist Margaret Hamilton was responsible for the programming used in the Apollo missions.
Physicist Ride was the first American woman to travel to space in 1983, while Jemison, an engineer and physician, was the first US woman of colour in space.
According to Lego, the set was meant to include mathematician Katherine Johnson, whose calculations made the Mercury and Apollo missions possible, but Johnson chose not to take part.
Ride and Jemison’s Lego home is a launchpad and Space Shuttle Challenger with three removable rocket stages.
The idea was submitted by Maia Weinstock, MIT New’s deputy news editor, to the Lego Ideas team in July 2016 and the figures were brought to life by Lego designers Tara Wike and Gemma Anderson.
“We have also seen that when girls and women are given more encouragement in the STEM fields, they become more likely to pursue careers in these areas.
“With this project, I wanted to spotlight a fantastic group of women who have made seminal contributions to Nasa history.”
Wike added: “It was a great experience to give these amazing women their new Lego identity and a great honour to personally present Margaret Hamilton with her very own mini-figure.
Lego evaluated the idea after supporters gave it more than 10,000 upvotes in just over two weeks.
The collection costs $24.99 (£19) and will be available to purchase in New York from October 28, while the rest of the world will have to wait a few more days when it hits the stores on November 1.